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Burials in Glasnevin Cemetery: Difference between revisions

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* [[Patrick James Smyth]] Journalist and politician
* [[Patrick James Smyth]] Journalist and politician
* [[David P. Tyndall]] - prominent Irish businessman who transformed the grocery business
* [[David P. Tyndall]] - prominent Irish businessman who transformed the grocery business
* [[William Joseph Walsh]], Roman Catholic [[Archbishop of Dublin]]


==External links==
==External links==

Revision as of 10:14, 1 February 2011

Éamon de Valera's grave
His wife, Sinéad, and son, Brian are buried there also.
A close up view of the de Valera gravestone
Charles Stewart Parnell's gravestone
Though a member of the Church of Ireland, Parnell was buried in Glasnevin in view of its status - at least in the eyes of those who followed him in politics - as the de facto national cemetery
Memorial to Patrick O'Donnell, Glasnevin Cemetery, Dublin
Monument to Ireland's war dead
in the Great War 1914-18.
The monument lists those buried in the cemetery killed during Ireland's involvement serving in Irish regiments of the British and Allied Armies.
Glasnevin gravestones
Mid nineteenth century plain gravestone (centre) surrounded by versions of celtic crosses, which became the fashion in the late nineteenth century.

This is a list of notable people buried in Glasnevin Cemetery.

See also Category: Burials at Glasnevin Cemetery

External links

References

  1. ^ Alan O'Day, ‘O'Leary, John (1830–1907)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, Sept 2004; online edn, May 2006